The 146.700(-) and 448.900(-) MHz with a 100 Hz PL Tone WØDK repeaters can be accessed from the Wyoming border in the north, to Monument Hill (near Colorado Springs) in the south. Coverage is primarily to the east of the Rockies Front Range, as the repeater signal is blocked to the west by
mountain peaks with altitudes of over 14,000 feet.

The repeaters are maintained by a small group of dedicated volunteers. If you need to report any performance or operational problems, please send a kindly worded email as follows:

Address it to ==> w zer0 dk dot repeater.team@gmail.com <== total of 28 characters,
appropriate words replaced by numerical digit or punctuation. Sorry
to have to make it a challenge, but this will hopefully minimize bots
from correcting and auto emailing to the address.

The subject line must include the club name or initials and the word "repeater" or it will not pass our spam filter.

Include your phone number in the email.

The reply will come from one of our personal emails, so check your spam
folder if you do not see an acknowledgement. We will try to
acknowledge within 48 hours.

Please realize that none of the repeater team volunteers live or work in
close proximity to the repeater, and access has to be prearranged. If your
issue is affecting actual emergency communications and requires immediate
attention, please contact one of the Board members who all have our
personal phone numbers.

W0DK Repeater Room at NCAR/UCARPhotos by Ueli, KB9TTI/HB9TTI

Old repeater room & rack

New room & equipment rack

Motorola Micor & old SCOM 7K

Dan, NØHF; Ken, NØQO; Ellie, NØQCX;
Rip, NVØM; and George, WGØS

WØDK colinear array

George, Rip, & Ken running cable

Looking north from the repeater

Rip (NVØM) putting the final
touches on the repeater

"I think she's ready"

Thanks from BARC to George Stringe, WGØS, for making this new room and equipment rack possible!!

It's Here!

The aim of the IRLP project is to reliably and inexpensively link amateur radio systems without the use of RF links, leased lines, or satellites.

The IRLP uses Voice-Over-IP (VoIP) custom software and hardware. Coupled with the power of the Internet, IRLP links our BARC 146.610(-) 100 Hz tone repeater to the world.

IRLP operates a network of dedicated servers and nodes offering very stable worldwide voice communications between hundreds of towns and cities. All this with unsurpassed uptimes and the full dynamic range of telephone quality audio.